Legal Ethics: Duties & Privileges of LawyerWadhwa, 1964 - 348 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 87
Página 68
... Advocate , with his character as a moral agent , using his moral influence for the advocate's purpose , he acts immorally . He makes the moral rule subordinate to the professional rule . He sells to the client , not only his skill and ...
... Advocate , with his character as a moral agent , using his moral influence for the advocate's purpose , he acts immorally . He makes the moral rule subordinate to the professional rule . He sells to the client , not only his skill and ...
Página 69
... advocate worthy of being allowed to become , and continue as such , -every advocate desirous of being regarded as a man of honour ; who is not , in fact , simply a knave ; nay , in plain terms , a liar , however his callous conscience ...
... advocate worthy of being allowed to become , and continue as such , -every advocate desirous of being regarded as a man of honour ; who is not , in fact , simply a knave ; nay , in plain terms , a liar , however his callous conscience ...
Página 243
... advocate to convert himself from the advocate , into the judge of his own client , who has engaged his services as advocate alone . By thus prematurely and gratuitously expressing his own opinion against the merits of his client's case ...
... advocate to convert himself from the advocate , into the judge of his own client , who has engaged his services as advocate alone . By thus prematurely and gratuitously expressing his own opinion against the merits of his client's case ...
Contenido
Chapter | 1 |
Necessity for a Code of Legal Ethics | 9 |
A Code of Legal Ethics | 17 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 22 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
accused action administration advocate answer appear argument asked Association attorney authority become believe Bench better called cause character charge Chief cited claim client common conduct consider consideration contempt counsel course court criminal decision defence doubt duty engaged Ethics evidence express fact favour feel give given Green guilty hand honor important influence interest judge judgment judicial jury justice keep knowledge lawyer learned litigation look Lord matter means mind moral nature never observed once opinion party person practice present principles prisoner profession professional proper question reason receive regard relation replied respect result retained rule side sometimes success suit tell thing tion trial true truth witnesses wrong young